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Featured researches published by Roland Svirgsden.


Ichthyological Research | 2017

Invasion of round goby to the temperate salmonid streams in the Baltic Sea

Aare Verliin; Martin Kesler; Roland Svirgsden; Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; Mehis Rohtla; Kalvi Hubel; R. Eschbaum; Markus Vetemaa; Toomas Saat

Round goby Neogobius melanostomus, initially originating from the Ponto-Caspian region, has become one of the most successful invasive species in the Northern Hemisphere. During the last three decades, this invasive fish has established numerous populations both in Eurasia and North America (reviewed in Kornis et al. 2012). In Europe, this species has invaded lakes, large rivers and also various marine environments. In Northern America, round goby has started to spread from lakes to several estuaries, marshes and smaller tributaries (Poos et al. 2010; Kornis et al. 2012). High tolerance to various environmental factors, short generation time, opportunistic diet preferences and aggressive behaviour allows this species to colonize different biotopes (Corkum et al. 2004; Johnson et al. 2005; Brown and Stepien 2008; Kornis et al. 2014). Rapid invasion of round goby has proved to have impact on native fish populations in several invaded regions. Declines in abundance of some benthic fishes as stone loach Barbatula barbatula, bullhead Cottus gobio and white-finned gudgeon Romanogobio albipinnatus have been suggested in European freshwaters (Jurajda et al. 2005). In the Baltic Sea, the expansion of round goby has been suggested to affect flounder Platichthys flesus, eelpout Zoarces viviparus and native gobies (Balážová-L’avrincı́ková and Kovác 2007; Karlson et al. 2007). In North America, several percid and cottid species compete with round goby for food, territory and spawning grounds (Jude et al. 1995; Janssen and Jude 2001). Round goby invasion to the Baltic Sea was confirmed in 1990, when several fish were caught from Puck Bay in Poland (Skóra and Stolarski 1993). In the Estonian coastal sea, round goby was found in 2002, from Pärnu Bay in the Gulf of Riga (Shpilev and Ojaveer 2003). However, first rapidly growing population occurred during the mid-2000s in Muuga Bay near Tallinn, in the southern coast of the Gulf of Finland (Ojaveer 2006). During the 2010s, round goby dispersed widely along the southern coast of Gulf of Finland and became particularly abundant in several small bays east of Tallinn. Since 2011, the round gobies were found from six salmonid spawning streams along the North Estonian coast (Fig. 1). Fishes were caught during the national annual salmonid parr density survey, using backpack electrofishing gear. Study sites (two or three per stream) were located in rapid sections situated on the lower reaches of the streams which are accessible to anadromous salmonids. All sites were fished twice and the interval between sampling runs was at least 30 minutes. The abundance of salmonids and all other fish species were recorded, all caught fish were measured to the nearest mm (total length), kept in water buckets and released afterwards (except round gobies). Based on the maximum summer water temperatures, streams were classified as cool (13.1–17.0 C; three locations) or temperate (17.1–21.0 C; three locations) (Järvekülg 2001). The length of the streams varied between 25 and 85 km, catchment areas between 84–479 km and mean discharges in lower reaches between 0.5–4.0 m/s (Loopmann 1979) [Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM) Table S1]. All the studied sites were located in freshwater, and distances along a stream from the sea varied from 0.5 to 2.6 km. In three streams, where round Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10228-016-0537-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Helgoland Marine Research | 2015

Variations in egg characteristics of ruffe Gymnocephalus cernua inhabiting brackish and freshwater environments

Roland Svirgsden; Anu Albert; Mehis Rohtla; Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; Aare Verliin; Martin Kesler; Kalvi Hubel; Markus Vetemaa; Toomas Saat

Egg characteristics of teleost fishes are affected by various abiotic and biotic factors. In order to reproduce successfully, freshwater fishes inhabiting brackish environments must alter their reproductive characteristics, including egg properties, to increased osmotic pressure. Ruffe Gymnocephalus cernua was used as a model species to compare egg characteristics between fish populations inhabiting brackish and freshwater environments. Fish from the brackish environment had larger eggs with higher energy content than the individuals originating from freshwater. In freshwater, eggs from the first batch were larger than from the second. Female size correlated positively with egg size in the brackish water population. In freshwater, this correlation was evident only with eggs from the first batch. Only a weak positive correlation was found between fish condition and egg size in females from the brackish water population. Egg size variation did not differ between sites, nor was it correlated with mean egg size or any other maternal traits within populations. These results indicate significant modifications in reproductive strategies between brackish and freshwater ruffe populations. Additionally, results show that at least in freshwater, the first batch of eggs is of the highest quality and therefore more important for reproduction.


Advances in Limnology | 2013

Whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus (L.)) landings in the Baltic Sea during the past 100 years: combining official datasets and grey literature

Aare Verliin; Lauri Saks; Roland Svirgsden; Markus Vetemaa; Mehis Rohtla; Imre Taal; Toomas Saat

European whitefi sh (Coregonus lavaretus (L.)) has been one of the commercially most important Baltic Sea freshwater fi sh species, especially in northern regions. More or less systematic recording of whitefi sh landings in the Baltic Sea started nearly a century ago. Although understanding the development of local fi sheries is crucial for the sustainable management of fi sh populations, to date there are no combined data (including both commercial and recreational fi sheries) available which summarise past whitefi sh landings in the Baltic Sea area. In this study we summarised available data on whitefi sh landings using offi cial datasets and also the so-called grey literature, i.e. different reports and journals of fi shing societies. This revealed that increasing fi shing effort and modernisation of fi shing gear in all Baltic Sea regions resulted in increased landings during the fi rst half of the twentieth century, but an overall decline in whitefi sh catches has been evident from the mid-1950s and was probably caused by overfi shing, eutrophication and restricted access to spawning grounds.


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2014

Life history of anadromous burbot (Lota lota, Linneaus) in the brackish Baltic Sea inferred from otolith microchemistry

Mehis Rohtla; Markus Vetemaa; Imre Taal; Roland Svirgsden; Kristjan Urtson; Lauri Saks; Aare Verliin; Martin Kesler; Toomas Saat


Helgoland Marine Research | 2014

Evidence for an autumn downstream migration of Atlantic salmon Salmo salar (Linnaeus) and brown trout Salmo trutta (Linnaeus) parr to the Baltic Sea

Imre Taal; Martin Kesler; Lauri Saks; Mehis Rohtla; Aare Verliin; Roland Svirgsden; Kristiina Jürgens; Markus Vetemaa; Toomas Saat


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2014

Diet composition of smelt Osmerus eperlanus (Linnaeus) in brackish near‐shore ecosystem (Eru Bay, Baltic Sea)

Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; Snežana Nedolgova; Aare Verliin; Martin Kesler; Kristiina Jürgens; Roland Svirgsden; Markus Vetemaa; Toomas Saat


Fisheries Management and Ecology | 2015

Life-history characteristics of ide Leuciscus idus in the Eastern Baltic Sea

Mehis Rohtla; Roland Svirgsden; Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; R. Eschbaum; Markus Vetemaa


Fisheries Research | 2017

Developing novel means for unravelling population structure, provenance and migration patterns of European whitefish Coregonus lavaretus s.l. in the Baltic Sea

Mehis Rohtla; Roland Svirgsden; Aare Verliin; Kateriina Rumvolt; Lagle Matetski; Kristiina Hommik; Lauri Saks; Markus Vetemaa


Archive | 2014

Using otolith 87Sr:86Sr as a natal chemical tag in the progeny of anadromous Baltic Sea pike (Esox lucius) — a pilot study

Mehis Rohtla; Markus Vetemaa; Roland Svirgsden; Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; Martin Kesler; Aare Verliin; Toomas Saat


Ecology of Freshwater Fish | 2018

Do Eurasian minnows (Phoxinus phoxinus L.) inhabiting brackish water enter fresh water to reproduce: Evidence from a study on otolith microchemistry

Roland Svirgsden; Mehis Rohtla; Anu Albert; Imre Taal; Lauri Saks; Aare Verliin; Markus Vetemaa

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